99
99
Feb 13, 2013
02/13
Feb 13, 2013
by
Ellie Early
audio
eye 99
favorite 0
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Ellie Early sings the song she wrote, Thundering Herds! You may remember Ellie and this song from such performances as "The Forest Garden Design Intensive in Tennessee." Ellie occasionally writes at https://amarillotableland.wordpress.com/ . (Recorded, edited, and published by Patrick Gibbs.) Creative Commons - Attribution - Share Alike 3.0 Unported. THUNDERING HERDS! by Ellie Early Heartbreaking desert farmland, hills torn by erosion. Plants grow with each rain, healing by animal...
Topics: Ellie Early, folk, acapella, bioregionalism
8
8.0
2007
2007
2007
by
Fritsch, Albert J
texts
eye 8
favorite 0
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xvi, 435 p. : 22 cm
Topics: Appropriate technology -- Appalachian Region, Sustainable living -- Appalachian Region,...
5
5.0
2006
2006
2006
by
Desai, Pooran
texts
eye 5
favorite 0
comment 0
128 pages : 14 x 15 cm
Topics: Sustainable development, Bioregionalism
30
30
texts
eye 30
favorite 1
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viii, 330 pages : 24 cm
Topics: Nachhaltigkeit, Stadtsoziologie, Stadtplanung, Stadtgrün, Ecologie, Humanökologie, Stadtleben,...
Source: removedNEL
5
5.0
2004
2004
2004
by
Carr, Mike, 1942-
texts
eye 5
favorite 0
comment 0
viii, 332 p. : 24 cm
Topics: Bioregionalism, Civil society, Sustainable development
Source: removedNEL
3
3.0
2002
2002
2002
by
Desai, Pooran
texts
eye 3
favorite 0
comment 0
109 pages : 22 cm
Topics: Bioregionalism, Sustainable development, Hållbar utveckling
9
9.0
2001
2001
2001
by
Dann, Kevin T., 1956-
texts
eye 9
favorite 1
comment 0
Includes bibliographical references (pages 211-217) and index
Topics: Natural history, Bioregionalism, Bioregionalism, Natural history
70
70
movies
eye 70
favorite 2
comment 0
Hexvessel - Gaia (Tiamat cover)
Topics: GAIA, Hexvessel, general collapse, ecology, Near Term Human Extinction, ecological collapse,...
1,502
1.5K
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by
Shaping San Francisco
movies
eye 1,502
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Peter Berg was one of the original San Francisco Diggers and went on to co-found the Planet Drum Foundation. He was at the first UN Conference on the Environment in Stockholm Sweden in 1972, was one of the originators of Bioregionalism, and has been at the heart of many ecological battles, including California's Peripheral Canal. This is part of the "Ecology Emerges" oral history interview collection by Shaping San Francisco, tracing the arc of environmental activism from conservation...
Topics: ecology, Ecology Emerges, bioregionalism, watersheds, Peripheral Canal, Diggers
1,691
1.7K
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by
Shaping San Francisco
movies
eye 1,691
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Judy Goldhaft is a cofounder of Planet Drum Foundation in San Francisco, and was previously one of the band of radicals known as the San Francisco Diggers. She also helped start the Frisco Bay Mussel Group in the late 1970s and has been in the middle of the emeregnce of bioregionalism. She is interviewed here as part of the wide-ranging "Ecology Emerges" oral histories of the early ecology movement, traversing the era from the 1950s-60s all the way to the present.
Topics: Diggers, Planet Drum, ecology, bioregionalism, Frisco Bay Mussel Group, water, peripheral canal
59
59
audio
eye 59
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In his December 1993 interview with Ron Chepesiuk, Peter Berg detailed his part in the ‘60s radical movement and his more recent activities with the Planet Drum Foundation. Berg described his involvement in the Digger movement and environmental movement with bioregionalism at its core. He covered such topics as McCarthyism, the psychedelic movement and the drugs involved, guerilla theatre, San Francisco movements, the Black Liberation Movement, and the Diggers. Berg also discussed the...
Topics: Shasta Bioregion, Planet Drum Foundation, Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, bioregionalism, ecology,...
1,950
2.0K
texts
eye 1,950
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Bioregionalism
Topics: bioregional, cultural, ecological, bioregionalism, global, human, environmental, natural,...
630
630
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-
-
by
The Godesky Brothers
audio
eye 630
favorite 0
comment 0
Sure, lots of people say they play Dungeons & Dragons, but does that mean they've all played the same game? Local traditions and cultures of play matter at least as much as the rules-as-written, and maybe even more. The game only happens in the context of the people playing it, and what they bring to the table. So does it make sense to talk about the written rules at all?
Topics: roleplaying, game, gaming, local, bioregionalism